With only days to go until Election Day, Kathy Marchione and Robin Andrews are busying themselves with shoe-leather campaigning door to door, phone banks and events.

"We're doing the same thing we've been doing for the last several months," Marchione spokesman Ken Girardin said. "She's at events, talking to voters and we're finding our message is resonating."

Similarly, Andrews' spokesman, Colin Brennan, said, "We're keeping up the pace. Our campaign has been grassroots from the beginning, and Robin has been out knocking on doors and rallying votes."

Marchione's campaign raised 10 times the amount of money Andrews' campaign did in October alone, according to the most recent campaign filings, but Brennan said that hasn't deterred his camp.

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"Marchione should know better than anyone that you don't necessarily need to out-fundraise someone to beat them," Brennan said.

The county clerk was outspent 5-1 by incumbent Sen. Roy McDonald in the primary, which McDonald lost by just over 100 votes.

Both the Marchione and Andrews campaign spokesmen said they would be spending their campaign dollars on mailers, as well as radio and television ads.

For Andrews, the TV ads will be the first of the campaign.

"We've got to get the most bang for our buck," Brennan said.

Conversely, Marchione ads have been running for months, throughout even the contentious primary campaign.

This week, too, calls in support of Marchione have been going out from the National Organization for Marriage, a national advocacy organization opposed to same-sex marriage, to voters in the district.

NOM made thousands of phone calls and paid for mailers supporting Marchione in the primary campaign against McDonald, whom NOM President Brian Brown called a "turncoat senator" who "betrayed marriage."

McDonald was one of four Republican senators to vote with Democrats in passing the Marriage Equality Act in 2011, legalizing same-sex marriage in New York. Many have attributed his narrow primary loss in large part to that vote.

Since winning the primary, Marchione said same-sex marriage in New York is "behind us" and politically reversing it "isn't going to happen" with a Democratic Assembly and governor. She said it is not a focus in her campaign.

Andrews' campaign, however, attacked Marchione for the calls from NOM in a press release, saying Marchione and NOM have "not backed off from their right-wing agenda and attacks on personal freedoms."

Girardin said the campaign "has no involvement with outside groups and what they're doing."

Despite that, Brennan said, the Marchione campaign is still benefiting from NOM's actions.

Girardin, in turn, said it is "absolutely shameful that our opponent has chosen to engage in false, negative attacks instead of bringing any solutions to the table."

At the same time, both camps emphasized that their focus is on the economy and jobs.

"My opponent wants to impose her beliefs on people's personal lives," Andrews said in a statement, "while I prefer to use my experience as a budget and planning consultant to work with Gov. Cuomo in paring back the bureaucracy and regulations that hinder job creation."

Girardin, on the other hand, said, "It's sad that our opponent would rather make false, negative attacks about social issues than talk about the issues that keep middle-class families up at night," and that Marchione "is focused on finding ways to get New York working again and to lower property taxes."